Finnish education lauded as a competitive edge for Business, but why is the Economy lagging?

The quality of higher education and training is a crucial determinant of a country’s competitiveness and its capacity for economic growth. Manufacturing and some low productivity jobs are being shifted to countries where labour costs are lower.

To keep competitive in the global rat race, advanced economies like Finland and other Nordic Countries need to be ever more efficient in with higher productivity and information worker jobs requiring comprehensive education and lifelong learning.

The World Economic Forum’s annual Global Competitiveness Report evaluates 144 of the world’s economies on the quality of their education systems as evaluated by business leaders, plus secondary and tertiary enrolment rates and the extent of staff training.

Despite Finland continuously ranking well in studies about competiveness it is worth nothing that the country is behind other European countries in recovery from the economic turmoil of the Financial Crisis starting 2007.

Seasonally adjusted output decreased by 0.5 per cent in May from the month before. Adjusted for working days, output fell by 1.2 per cent from May 2014. According to revised data, working-day adjusted output fell in April by 0.2 per cent (previously -1.2 per cent) from April 2014. The revision was caused by the benchmarking of the data to quarterly accounts.

So all this begs the question... If Finland is so very competitive in theory, why does it fail to perform in practise?